Donald Trump’s affection for North Korea’s Kim Jong Un has long been odd, but it was during a 2018 rally when the Republican broke new rhetorical ground regarding the brutal dictator.
“We fell in love, OK? No, really,” Trump declared. “He wrote me beautiful letters, and they’re great letters. We fell in love.”
Even at the time, it was jarring to see a sitting American president gush about his fondness for a nuclear-armed tyrant who’s threatened the United States and its allies. But four years to the month later, the relevance of those “beautiful letters” has returned to the fore. The Washington Post reported yesterday:
In December 2019, after President Donald Trump had shared with journalist Bob Woodward the fawning letters that North Korean leader Kim Jong Un had written to him, the U.S. leader seems to acknowledge he should not be showing them around. After urging Woodward to “treat them with respect,” Trump warns in an interview, “and don’t say I gave them to you, okay?”
According to Woodward’s notes of a call with Trump a month later, Trump said in reference to Kim’s letters: “Oh, those are so top secret.”
At face value, the comments might seem unremarkable. A foreign dictator sent private correspondence to the sitting American president in the wake of their nuclear negotiations. Of course U.S. officials are going to take the letters seriously.
But the details matter: Trump didn’t just show off the Kim letters as a trophy while trying to impress Woodward, he also included the correspondence among his boxes when he took sensitive materials with him as he left the White House.








